Abstract
Mechanical efficiency is reduced in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Furthermore, altered fibre-type distribution and metabolic profile has been observed in peripheral skeletal muscle of COPD patients. Since skeletal muscular uncoupling protein‐3 (UCP3) has been implicated in the regulation of energy metabolism, the aim of this study was to assess UCP3 in peripheral skeletal muscle of COPD patients and healthy controls.
A total of 16 COPD patients and 11 healthy age-matched control subjects were studied. Mechanical efficiency was measured by means of cycle ergometry. Biopsies were taken from the vastus lateralis, and UCP3 and cytochrome c (as a marker for mitochondrial content) levels were assessed by Western blotting. Muscle fibre types and metabolic profile were examined histochemically. UCP3 levels were markedly decreased in COPD compared to controls. In COPD patients, there was a positive correlation between UCP3 content and the forced expiratory volume in one second. UCP3 content was not related to mechanical efficiency, or other muscular data such as fibre types, markers of oxidative/glycolytic energy metabolism or cytochrome c.
The authors of this study conclude that uncoupling protein‐3 content is decreased in peripheral skeletal muscle of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and is related to disease severity, but not to mechanical efficiency. The low uncoupling protein‐3 content is independent of the loss of oxidative capacity observed in these patients.
- chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- energy metabolism
- muscle fibre types
- peripheral skeletal muscle
- uncoupling protein‐3
This study was supported by a grant from the Netherlands Asthma Foundation (project number 96.16). P. Schrauwen was supported by a grant from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO).
Total daily energy expenditure (EE) is often elevated in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients 1, suggesting that these patients are characterised by hypermetabolism. Total daily EE consists of the resting EE, diet-induced thermogenesis and energy spent during daily activities. Although diet-induced thermogenesis is normal in COPD and can therefore be ignored 2, elevated resting EE has been observed in some COPD patients 3, 4. However, it has been shown that total daily EE is elevated independent of resting EE 5, suggesting that the elevated total EE in COPD is related to daily activities. Due to the physical disabilities of patients with COPD, it must be assumed that these patients perform less physical activities compared to healthy subjects. Therefore, the elevated total daily EE is most likely explained by an elevated energy cost for physical activity. Indeed, mechanical efficiency, measured by means of submaximal exercise testing, is decreased in these patients 6.
The reason for the decreased mechanical efficiency in COPD patients is not known. Sala et al. 7 showed that for any specific workload, oxygen uptake of the leg is higher compared to healthy control subjects, suggesting that intrinsic muscular abnormalities are involved. Intrinsic abnormalities have indeed been found in peripheral skeletal muscles in COPD, of which, from a metabolic point of view, the most obvious are a reduction in the fibre type I proportion and a decreased oxidative capacity 8. These findings suggest a potential relationship between mechanical inefficiency and muscular abnormalities in COPD. Recently, human homologues of the brown adipose tissue uncoupling protein 1 have been identified and these proteins are potentially important determinants of human energy metabolism 9, 10. Uncoupling protein‐3 (UCP3) is predominantly expressed in skeletal muscle and uncouples oxidative phosphorylation from adenosine trisphosphate (ATP) production 11. The first evidence for a relation between UCP3 and energy metabolism came from genetic studies showing that the locus of the UCP3 gene is in the vicinity of markers strongly linked to resting EE 12. Measurements of UCP3 messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) expression and protein content in relation to EE further supported a role for UCP3 in energy metabolism. In Pima Indians, Schrauwen et al. 13 found a positive correlation between the mRNA expression of UCP3 and the sleeping metabolic rate. Decreased levels of UCP3 in humans accompany weight reduction and endurance training 14–16, conditions that result in a reduced resting metabolic rate and/or improved energy efficiency. Also, mice overexpressing UCP3 eat more but weigh less compared to wild-type controls, indicating an increased EE 17. Finally, a clear inverse relationship was observed between mechanical efficiency and UCP3 expression in healthy subjects 14. Although there is also evidence that the primary function of UCP3 is not the regulation of energy expenditure 11, 18, 19, the above-mentioned studies clearly indicate that UCP3 is related to human EE, perhaps as a secondary effect of its unknown function. Therefore, it is feasible that the increased EE and decreased mechanical efficiency in COPD could be attributed to elevated UCP3 levels. Elevated UCP3 levels in COPD would also be consistent with the finding that human UCP3 is highly expressed in type IIX (or IIB) fibres 20, since it has been shown that COPD patients have an increased proportion of type II fibres 8.
The aim of the present study was to investigate the UCP3 content of peripheral skeletal muscles of COPD patients, as compared to healthy age-matched controls. Furthermore, the relationship between UCP3 content, muscle fibre type distribution, muscle metabolic profile and mechanical efficiency of cycle ergometry was investigated.
Methods
A group of 15 patients with moderate-to-severe airflow obstruction and 11 healthy age-matched volunteers were studied. All patients had COPD, according to American Thoracic Society (ATS) guidelines 21, and chronic airflow limitation, defined as measured forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) <70% of reference FEV1. In addition, all patients had a FEV1/forced vital capacity (FVC) <70%. Furthermore, patients had irreversible obstructive airway disease (<10% improvement of FEV1 predicted baseline after β2-agonist inhalation). Five of the 15 patients had severe COPD or disease severity stage III according to the ATS guidelines 21. They were in a clinically stable condition and were not suffering from a respiratory tract infection or an exacerbation of their disease at least 4 weeks prior to the study. Exclusion criteria were malignancy, cardiac failure, distal arteriopathy, recent surgery, severe endocrine, hepatic or renal disorders, and use of anticoagulant medication. The healthy age-matched control subjects were volunteers recruited through an advertisement in a local newspaper. Written informed consent was obtained from all subjects and the study was approved by the medical ethical committee of the University Hospital Maastricht (Maastricht, the Netherlands).
Pulmonary function tests
All patients and control subjects underwent spirometry to determine, amongst others, FEV1 and FVC, with the highest value from at least three technically acceptable assessments being used. Residual volume and intrathoracic gas volume were assessed by whole-body plethysmography and diffusion capacity for carbon monoxide (DL,CO) was measured by using the single-breath method (Masterlab; Jaeger, Wurzburg, Germany). All values obtained were related to a reference value and expressed as percentage of the predicted value 22. Arterial oxygen tension (Pa,O2) was determined (ABL 330; Radiometer, Copenhagen, Denmark) in a blood sample obtained by puncture of the radial artery while breathing room air.
Assessment of body composition
Body height was determined to the nearest 0.5 cm with subjects standing barefoot, and body weight was assessed to the nearest 0.1 kg while subjects wore light clothing and no shoes. Whole-body fat-free mass (FFM), which consists of lean mass and bone mineral mass, was determined by scanning each subject on a DPX bone densitometer (Lunar Radiation Corporation, Madison, WI, USA) as described previously 23. Weight parameters were divided by squared body height (kg·m−2), resulting in the body mass index (BMI) and FFM index (FFMI), to adjust for body surface 24.
Resting energy expenditure
Energy expenditure at rest (REE) was measured by indirect calorimetry using a ventilated hood system (Oxycon Beta®; Jaeger). The reproducibility and validity of this method in COPD patients was shown by Schols et al. 25. The system was calibrated daily at the start of the experiment. The accuracy of the system was regularly assessed using a methanol combustion test. Measurements were performed in the early morning after an overnight fast, while the subject was comfortably lying on a bed in supine position. EE was calculated from oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide production using the abbreviated Weir formula 26. Measured REE was expressed as percentage of predicted REE, which was calculated using the linear regression equation of REE on FFM, as described by Creutzberg et al. 4.
Mechanical efficiency during cycle ergometry
Recently, a close correlation between mechanical efficiency during submaximal exercise testing and the ratio of peak oxygen consumption (VO2,peak) to peak work rate (WRpeak) during maximal exercise testing was found in COPD 27. Therefore, in this study the VO2,peak/WRpeak was used as a measure of gross efficiency in the current study. All subjects performed an incremental exercise test on an electrically braked cycle ergometer (Corival 400®; Lode, Groningen, the Netherlands) under the supervision of a chest physician. Before the start of the test, while seated on the cycle ergometer, ventilation characteristics at rest were analysed for 2 min. During the entire exercise test, expired gases were investigated using breath-by-breath analysis through a breathing mask (Oxycon Beta®; Jaeger). After 1 min of unloaded cycling, power was increased by 10 W every min for patients. For the control subjects, the load was increased by 15–25 W every 1 min, so that the length of the exercise test was comparable for patients and controls. None of the subjects knew the exercise load and all were encouraged to cycle at 60 revs·min−1 until exhaustion. VO2,peak and WRpeak were measured at the moment of cessation of the exercise. A high VO2,peak-to-WRpeak ratio corresponds to a low gross efficiency.
Collection and processing of muscle tissue
Postabsorptive muscle biopsies of the lateral part of the quadriceps femoris were obtained under local anesthesia using the needle biopsy technique 28. Part of the tissue was used to obtain serial cryostat cross-sections (10 µm) for histochemistry. Evaluation of fibre type distribution was performed using a combination of myofibrillar ATPase (mATPase) staining and immunohistochemistry, as described previously 29. In short, the mATPase acidic and alkaline pre-incubations were performed at pH 4.4 and pH 10.4, respectively. Double pre-incubation was performed at pH 10.4 and pH 4.6. After pre-incubation, sections were stained and mounted. Immunohistochemistry was performed with a panel of monoclonal anitibodies (mAb), respectively, anti-type I myosin heavy chain (MyHC) (mAb 219-1D1), anti-type IIA MyHC (mAb 333-7H1) and anti-types IIA+IIX MyHC (mAb 332-3D4). Fibre cross-sectional area (CSA) was measured with an interactive image analysis system (Leica QWin Image Analysis System; Leica Microsystems BV, Rijswijk, the Netherlands), as reported previously 30. The relative contribution of type II fibres to total fibre CSA (%CSA of type II fibres) was calculated. Metabolic profile of muscle fibres was evaluated by staining for cytochrome c oxidase (COX) and succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) activity, as markers for oxidative energy metabolism, and glycogen phosphorylase (GlyP) activity, for glycolytic energy metabolism, as described previously 29. In short, for COX activity, staining sections were incubated for 1 h in a 50 mM Tris/HCl buffer (pH 7.6) containing 0.22 M sucrose, 14 mM 3,3′-diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride, 80 µM cytochrome c and 1300 U catalase. SDH activity staining was performed by incubating sections for 1 h at 37°C in a 0.2 M sodium phosphate buffer containing 0.1 M succinic acid and 1.2 mM nitro blue tetrazolium. GlyP staining was performed by incubating sections for 5 min in a 43 mM sodium acetate buffer (pH 5.6) containing 7 mM glucose‐1‐phosphate, 1 mM adenosine monophosphate, 0.01% glycogen and 15% ethanol, after which the newly formed polysaccharide was coloured with Lugol's iodine. Three staining intensities were determined, reflecting fibre enzyme activity: positive (+), negative (−) or intermediate (±). The current authors have previously reported altered fibre type distribution, fibre CSAs and metabolic profiles as presented in the current study 29, 30. The remaining parts of the muscle biopsies were homogenised in ice-cold Tris‐ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid buffer at pH 7.4 and then the homogenates were sonicated for 4×15 s. Subsequently, two volumes of each skeletal muscle homogenate and one volume of sodium dodecylsulphate (SDS) sample buffer were boiled for 4 min. Next, 13% polyacrylamide gels containing 0.1% SDS were loaded with equal amounts of protein from each sample and electrophoresis was performed using a Mini-Protean 3 Electrophoresis Cell (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA, USA). After gel electrophoresis, this gel was scanned, and the optical density of the 43-kDa band, previously immuno-identified to represent actin, was assessed. Then, a second gel was prepared and loaded with the sample volume (which had been recalculated based on the optical density of the actin band), after which Western blotting was performed using a Mini Trans-Blot Electrophoretic Transfer Cell (Bio-Rad Laboratories), as described previously 20. A rabbit polyclonal UCP3 antibody (code 1331; kindly provided by L.J. Slieker, Eli Lilly, Indianapolis, IN, USA) was prepared against a 20-amino acid (aa) peptide (human sequence aa 147–166), which recognises both the long and the short form of UCP3 and was previously shown to not recognise UCP2. The antibody was affinity-purified on a Sulfolink column (Pierce; Omnilabo International, Breda, the Netherlands) containing the peptide coupled through a COOH-terminal cysteine. Cross-reaction of the antibody with other proteins was checked by examining the entire 5‐ to 94-kDa range for additional bands. For a more detailed description of the selectivity and specificity checks see previous reports 15, 20, 31. The cytochrome c level, as a marker of mitochondrial content, was measured comparably, using a mouse monoclonal cytochrome c antibody (BD PharMingen, Woerden, the Netherlands). Both UCP3 and cytochrome c were expressed as arbitrary units (AU).
Statistical analysis
Data were analysed using the unpaired Student's t‐test (corrected for unequal variances if appropriate), one-way analysis of variance (with unpaired Student's t‐test as post-hoc test) or the Pearson correlation test, as appropriate 32. Data are represented as the mean±sem. A two-tailed probability value of <0.05 was considered statistically significant.
Results
The characteristics of patients and control subjects are summarised in table 1⇓. There were no differences in sex or age between the groups. FFMI was significantly lower in COPD while BMI was not significantly different from controls. Plasma glucose levels were within normal range in COPD. The proportions of type I fibres and fibres with high oxidative capacity were markedly lower in patients, whereas the fibre type IIX proportion was higher compared to healthy subjects. The relative contribution of the CSA of type II fibres tended to be larger in COPD, but this was not statistically significant (p=0.085).
Figure 1⇓ shows a representative Western blot of four controls and four COPD patients. On average, UCP3 content was 50% lower in COPD patients compared with control subjects (95±13 versus 47±8 AU; p=0.004), as shown in figure 2⇓. There was a significant positive correlation between the FEV1 and the peripheral skeletal muscle UCP3 content in COPD patients (r=0.66, p<0.01), as shown in figure 3⇓. There was no correlation between resting energy expenditure and UCP3 content in COPD. Five of the 15 patients had severe COPD or disease severity stage III, according to the ATS guidelines. These patients had a markedly lower UCP3 content compared to the patients with moderate COPD (19±4.4 versus 61±8.9 AU; p=0.001). The VO2,peak/WRpeak was significantly higher in COPD than in controls (16.7±1.2 versus 10.2±0.3 mL·min−1·watt−1; p<0.001). In addition, VO2,peak/WRpeak was significantly higher in patients with severe COPD than in patients with moderate COPD (fig. 4⇓). In COPD, an inverse correlation was found between the VO2,peak/WRpeak and UCP3 content (r=−0.568; p=0.027), but after adjustment for the disease severity, as measured by the FEV1, this correlation was not statistically significant (r=−0.402; p=0.154). There was no relationship between VO2,peak/WRpeak and fibre types or indices of metabolic profile.
To assess whether the reduced UCP3 content could be explained by the reduced oxidative capacity, cytochrome c content was measured in the same samples. There was no significant correlation (r=0.43; p=0.13) between UCP3 content and cytochrome c content in COPD. In addition, in the patient group, there were no correlations between UCP3 and the proportions of fibres with high staining activities for cytochrome c oxidase, succinate dehydrogenase or glycogen phosphorylase. Furthermore, there was no relationship between UCP3 and fibre type distribution in COPD, nor did the UCP3 content correlate with the relative contribution of type II fibres to the total fibre CSA (or % CSA of type II fibres). Peripheral skeletal muscle UCP3 content also did not correlate with fat-free mass (a measure of muscle mass). DL,CO did not correlate with UCP3 content in patients. There was a correlation between UCP3 and Pa,O2, but not after adjustment for FEV1.
Discussion
The main finding of the present study is the significantly lower UCP3 content in peripheral skeletal muscle of COPD patients, being lowest in the patients with the highest severity of COPD. This is the opposite of what the authors had expected with respect to mechanical inefficiency and the increased muscle fibre type II proportion in COPD. The low UCP3 levels could not be quantitatively attributed to the reduction in muscle mass or other muscular abnormalities, since UCP3 levels did not correlate with the fat-free mass index, nor with fibre type distribution or muscle fibre metabolic profile.
The data presented here clearly indicate that decreased leg efficiency in COPD is not the result of elevated muscular UCP3 contents. First of all, reduced instead of elevated levels of UCP3 were found. In addition, the expected inverse correlation between leg efficiency and UCP3 was not found. This result is in contrast to findings observed in healthy subjects, in which low levels of muscular UCP3 contents were associated with increased mechanical efficiency 14, although UCP3 was not evaluated in subjects with such a low mechanical efficiency as in the current COPD group. It can be speculated that the reduced UCP3 levels in COPD represent a compensatory adaptation to the decreased mechanical efficiency and/or elevated EE in these patients. However, there is also growing evidence that the primary function of UCP3 is not the regulation of energy metabolism, although UCP3 might (as a secondary effect of its primary function) influence energy metabolism in certain circumstances. For example, fasting, a condition associated with energy conservation, results in upregulation of UCP3 18. Also, UCP3 knockout mice have normal EE and body weight, even though their mitochondria show improved coupling 33. Thus, the primary function of UCP3 is at yet unknown. UCP3 has been suggested to be involved in the regulation of fuel metabolism. In this context, it is interesting to note the accumulating evidence that substrate metabolism is also impaired in COPD patients. Although no abnormal plasma glucose levels were found in COPD in the current study, the current authors have previously reported the presence of hyperinsulinaemia in moderate-to-severe COPD patients 34. Impaired glucose tolerance and impaired β‐adrenoceptor-mediated lipolysis have been shown for COPD 35, 36. Furthermore, reduced activities of enzymes involved in oxidative substrate metabolism have been found in the vastus lateralis of COPD patients 8. With respect to these abnormalities it is feasible that the reduced UCP3 contents in COPD may be associated with impaired substrate metabolism 37, 38. Mice overexpressing UCP3 show improved glucose metabolism (reduced fasting plasma glucose and insulin levels, and improved glucose tolerance after an oral glucose load), which suggests a role for UCP3 in carbohydrate metabolism and type II diabetes 17. Indeed, Schrauwen et al. 39 recently reported markedly reduced levels of UCP3 in patients with type II diabetes compared to control subjects. If and how UCP3 is involved in substrate metabolism in COPD needs to be further exploited. Alternatively, UCP3 has been suggested to be involved in mitochondrial fatty acid handling 40, 41. β‐Hydroxyacyl coenzyme A dehydrogenase, an enzyme involved in the β‐oxidation of fatty acids, was shown to be reduced in COPD 42 and it is tempting to speculate that COPD patients are characterised by impairments in fatty acid metabolism. However, further studies are needed to characterise substrate metabolism in COPD in more detail and to reveal the exact function of UCP3 in substrate metabolism in this group of patients. Another putative function of UCP3 is the regulation of reactive oxygen species production 43. Several observations point towards an imbalance between the production of oxygen species and the antioxidant status in muscles of COPD patients 44–46. Whether reduced UCP3 is involved in, or associated with, the defence against reactive oxygen species in COPD needs further examination.
The finding of lower UCP3 levels in COPD is also remarkable considering that human UCP3 is predominantly expressed in type II fibres 20. Despite an increase in the fibre type II proportion in COPD patients in the current study, there was a decrease of the UCP3 levels. The observed increase in the fibre type II proportion is, however, accompanied by selective atrophy of type II fibres in COPD, as reported recently 30. The relative contribution of type II fibres to the total fibre CSA is not larger in the patient group and this may partly explain why peripheral muscular UCP3 content is not increased in COPD. Alternatively, since oxidative capacity is also reduced in these patients and UCP3 is a mitochondrial protein, a reduction of UCP3 could be explained by a reduction in the mitochondrial content. However, no correlation was found between UCP3 and cytochrome c as a marker of mitochondrial content. There were also no relationships between UCP3 and the proportions of fibres staining positive for the mitochondrial enzymes COX or SDH. It can therefore be concluded from the present data that the low UCP3 content in COPD is probably not just an epiphenomena of altered muscle fibre composition and related oxidative capacity. Further studies are needed to examine whether the reduction of UCP3 in COPD is fibre type specific.
In conclusion, to the best of the current authors' knowledge, this is the first time that uncoupling protein‐3 content in the peripheral skeletal muscle of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease has been studied. In contrast to what was expected, uncoupling protein‐3 levels in patients were substantially lower compared to healthy control subjects. In addition, it can be concluded that uncoupling protein‐3 is not responsible for the decreased mechanical efficiency and, therefore, is probably not involved in elevated energy expenditure in these patients. The clinical significance of the reduced uncoupling protein‐3 in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and its relation to disease severity requires further investigation.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank L.J. Slieker from Eli Lilly for providing the UCP3 antibody and A.F.M. Moorman for providing the antibodies against MyHC isoforms I, IIA and IIA+IIX.
- Received October 1, 2002.
- Accepted February 24, 2003.
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